Watch the Versus Versace Spring Summer 2018 Ready to Wear collection presented at London Fashion Week SS18.
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Gucci S/S 2015 MFW
Gucci’s S/S 2015 collection at Milan Fashion Week, designed by Frida Giannini, brought a fresh take on western-inspired luxury. Think dusty desert roads meeting high-fashion runways. The collection balanced rugged elements like denim and boots with the brand’s signature opulence, creating a look that felt both approachable and elevated.
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Meadham Kirchhoff S/S 2015 LFW
Meadham Kirchhoff’s S/S 2015 collection at London Fashion Week was a masterclass in eccentricity. From the moment the first model stepped on the runway, it was clear that nothing about this show was going to be subtle. Bright colors, bold prints, and unexpected textures collided in every look. The collection had a carnival-like energy, chaotic but fully intentional. Every outfit was designed to grab attention and make a statement, and it succeeded beautifully.
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Hakaan S/S 2015 LFW
Hakaan’s S/S 2015 collection at London Fashion Week was unapologetically bee-themed, and I am here for it. From the moment the first model hit the runway, it was clear that designer Hakaan was fully embracing the world of bees, honey, and hexagons. This was not a subtle nod. Actual bees appeared as embellishments, honeycomb patterns tessellated across dresses, and the silhouettes themselves seemed inspired by the architecture of a hive. Every piece played with the idea of the bee in one form or another, and it made the collection feel cohesive and delightfully whimsical.
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Emilio de la Morena S/S 2015 LFW
Emilio de la Morena’s S/S 2015 collection at London Fashion Week felt like a love letter to the early 2000s party girl, the kind who never missed a flashbulb and always reached for whatever sparkled the hardest. This was fashion with a memory, pulled straight from the Paris Hilton and Lindsay Lohan era, when nightlife dictated style and excess was the point.
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Marques’ Almeida S/S 2015 LFW
Marques’ Almeida S/S 2015 at London Fashion Week felt like punk stripped back to its essentials, then splashed with color by someone who knows exactly what they are doing. It was simple but never boring, raw but intentional. Think art school rebellion meeting a colorful parachute moment, loud without being messy, confident without trying too hard.
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Simone Rocha S/S 2015 LFW
Simone Rocha S/S 2015 at London Fashion Week felt almost Victorian at first glance, but nothing here stayed polite for long. The collection flirted with tradition, then deliberately knocked it off balance. You could absolutely imagine corsets living underneath these looks, even though none were shown. The structure was there. The restraint was not.
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Osman S/S 2015 LFW
Osman’s Spring Summer 2015 collection at London Fashion Week delivered sleek restraint with just enough weirdness to keep it interesting. At first glance, the silhouettes felt controlled and modern. However, the longer you looked, the more playful details began to surface. This was not minimalism for the sake of being serious. It had personality, and it knew exactly when to show it.
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Issa London S/S 2015 LFW
At first glance, Issa London Spring Summer 2015 looks like chaos with a plan. The collection hits you immediately with what can only be described as lasagna graffiti. Layered, messy, and strangely satisfying. However, once the shock wears off, the intention becomes clear. This was not randomness. It was controlled experimentation.
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Erdem S/S 2015 LFW
Erdem Spring Summer 2015 felt like stepping into a carefully cultivated world where nature and couture exist in perfect harmony. From the very first look, the collection invited you inside a lush greenhouse fantasy, one built on precision, romance, and obsessive attention to detail. Nothing felt accidental. Every reference landed with intention.
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Antonio Berardi S/S 2015 LFW
Antonio Berardi Spring Summer 2015 unfolded like a confident conversation between strength and softness. From the opening look, it was clear this collection was not interested in playing by a single rulebook. Instead, Berardi leaned into contrast and let it lead the narrative. Bold elegance met fluid movement, and the tension between the two made the entire runway hum.